Winnipeg Free Press (Newspaper) - January 25, 2015, Winnipeg, Manitoba
C M Y K PAGE A7
winnipegfreepress. com WORLD WINNIPEG FREE PRESS, SUNDAY, JANUARY 25, 2015 A 7
K YIV, Ukraine - Indiscriminate rocket fire
slammed into a market, schools, homes
and shops Saturday in Ukraine's southeastern
city of Mariupol, killing at least 30 people,
authorities said. The Ukrainian president called
the blitz a terrorist attack and NATO and the U. S.
demanded Russia stop supporting the rebels.
Ukrainian officials rushed to defend the strategically
important port on the Sea of Azov, beefing
up military positions with more equipment
and sending in more forces.
The separatists' top leader declared an offensive
against Mariupol had begun - then later
toned down his threats as the scale of the civilian
casualties became clear.
President Petro Poroshenko held an emergency
meeting of his military officials and cut short a
trip to Saudi Arabia to co- ordinate the government's
response.
" The time has come to name their sponsors.
The help given to militants, weapons deliveries,
equipment and the training of manpower - is
this not aiding terrorism?" Poroshenko said in a
recorded statement.
Russia insists it does not support the rebels, but
western military officials say the sheer number
of heavy weapons under rebel control belies that
claim.
An AP reporter saw convoys of pristine heavy
weapons in rebel territory earlier this week.
The rocket attacks came a day after the rebels
rejected a peace deal and announced they were
going on a multi- prong offensive against the government
in Kyiv to vastly increase their territory.
The rebel stance has upended European attempts
to mediate an end to the fighting in eastern
Ukraine, which the UN says has killed nearly
5,100 people since April.
Mariupol, a major city under government
control, lies between mainland Russia and the
Russia- annexed Crimean Peninsula. Heavy fighting
in the region in the fall raised fears Russianbacked
separatist forces would try to capture the
city to establish a land link between Russia and
Crimea.
Ukraine's Defence Ministry said three separate
strikes from Grad multiple- rocket launchers
hit Mariupol and its surrounding areas Saturday.
" The area that came under attack was massive,"
Mariupol Mayor Yuriy Khotlubei said. " The
shelling was carried out by militants. This is
very clearly Russian aggression that has caused
terrible losses for the residents of the eastern
part of our city."
The Donetsk regional government loyal to Kyiv
said at least 30 people - including a 15- year- old
girl and a five- year old boy - died in the attacks.
A Ukrainian military checkpoint near the city
was also hit and one serviceman was killed, the
Defence Ministry said.
The RIA Novosti news agency cited Ukrainian
rebel leader Alexander Zakharchenko as
saying an offensive had begun on Mariupol. He
spoke as he laid a wreath Saturday where at least
eight civilians died when a bus stop was shelled
Thursday in Donetsk, the largest rebel- held city
in eastern Ukraine.
Zakharchenko swiftly backtracked, however.
He denied his forces were responsible for Saturday's
carnage, saying it was caused by Ukrainian
error. He also said the Ukrainian defence
positions around Mariupol would be destroyed
but the city itself would not be stormed.
But the Organization for Security and Cooperation's
monitoring mission said the attack on Mariupol
was caused by Grad and Uragan rockets
fired from areas under rebel control.
Rebel forces have positions 10 kilometres from
Mariupol's eastern outskirts. On Jan. 13, a bus
near an army checkpoint north of Mariupol was
hit by a shell, killing 13 people, an attack Ukraine
also blamed on the separatists.
Yulia, a Mariupol citizen who asked her name
not be used for fear of retaliation, told The Associated
Press by telephone Saturday her stricken
neighbourhood had no power or heat in the middle
of winter due to the attacks. Many residents
had boarded up their windows, fearing shattered
glass from further attacks, she said.
Reinforcements were being drafted into the
city, and the Mariupol- based Azov Battalion
was being equipped with more heavy weapons,
Interior Minister Arsen Avakov said in a posting
on Facebook. Security services also detained a
spotter suspected of giving rebel fighters coordinates
to launch rockets, he said.
Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk had ordered
regional leaders Friday to draw up economic
blueprints to put the financially struggling country
on a war footing. Ukraine began its fourth
wave of mobilization this week, building up manpower
for its faltering war effort.
Fighting has also been intensifying for the
government- held town of Debaltseve, 50 km east
of Donetsk. The main roads into the town are
under separatist control, and rebels have vowed
to surround the Ukrainian forces stationed there.
U. S. Secretary of State John Kerry said the
rebels' new offensive " has been aided and abetted
by Russia's irresponsible and dangerous decision
to resupply them in recent weeks with hundreds
of new pieces of advanced weaponry."
" I join my European counterparts in condemning
in the strongest terms today's horrific
assault by Russia- backed separatists on civilian
neighbourhoods in Mariupol," Kerry said in a
statement, citing reports of dozens wounded as
well.
He urged Russia to close its international
border with Ukraine and withdraw all weapons,
fighters and financial backing from the separatists
or face increased U. S. and international
pressure. The European Union and the U. S. have
already hit Russia with sanctions for its actions
in Ukraine, moves that have hurt the Russian
economy.
EU foreign affairs chief Federica Mogherini
echoed Kerry's demands.
NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg also
condemned the Mariupol shelling and what he
called the increased presence of Russian forces
in Ukraine.
" Russian troops in eastern Ukraine are supporting
these offensive operations with command-
and- control systems, air defence systems
with advanced surface- to- air missiles, unmanned
aerial systems, advanced multiple rocket- launcher
systems and electronic warfare systems," he
said.
UN Secretary- General Ban Ki- moon condemned
the attack on Mariupol, saying the rockets
" appear to have been launched indiscriminately
into civilian areas, which would constitute a
violation of international humanitarian law," said
a statement issued by his spokesman.
He denounced the rebel leadership's unilateral
withdrawal from the ceasefire and " their
provocative statements about claiming further
territory," the statement said.
A peace deal signed in September in the Belarusian
capital of Minsk envisaged a ceasefire and
a pullout of heavy weapons from a division line in
eastern Ukraine, but that was repeatedly violated
by both sides. Foreign ministers from Russia,
Ukraine, France and Germany agreed Wednesday
to revive that division line but the rebels on
Friday rejected the entire Minsk deal.
Senior envoys from Ukraine, Russia and the
OSCE issued a statement Saturday convening an
urgent meeting next week to restart the Minsk
peace process.
- The Associated Press
By Peter Leonard
Rocket blitz kills
30 civilians in Ukraine
President calls Mariupol attack terror
SERGEY VAGANOV / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Residents pass by burning houses in Mariupol, Ukraine, Saturday amid volleys of rocket fire in civilian areas authorities said killed at least 30 people.
SERGEY VAGANOV / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Burned cars on a destroyed parking site in a residential area in Mariupol.
SERGEI CHUZAVKOV / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
People light candles in Independence Square in Kyiv, Ukraine, Saturday in support of the Mariupol victims.
A_ 07_ Jan- 25- 15_ FP_ 01. indd A7 1/ 24/ 15 10: 49: 23 PM
;